Major Atmospheric Gamma Imaging Cherenkov Telescopes (MAGIC) detected the gamma-ray afterglow of GRB 190114C, which can constrain microscopic parameters of the shock-heated plasma emitting non-thermal emission. Focusing on the early afterglow of this event, we numerically simulate the spectrum and multi-wavelength light curves with constant and wind-like circumstellar medium using a time-dependent code. Our results show that the electron acceleration timescale at the highest energies is likely shorter than 20 times the gyroperiod to reproduce the GeV gamma-ray flux and its spectral index reported by {it Fermi}. This gives an interesting constraint on the acceleration efficiency for Weibel-mediated shocks. We also constrain the number fraction of non-thermal electrons $f_{rm e}$, and the temperature of the thermal electrons. The early optical emission can be explained by the thermal synchrotron emission with $f_{rm e} lesssim 0.01$. On the other hand, the X-ray light curves restrict efficient energy transfer from protons to the thermal electrons, and $f_{rm e}sim1$ is required if the energy fraction of the thermal electrons is larger than $sim10$%. The parameter constraints obtained in this work give important clues to probing plasma physics with relativistic shocks.